Product Details
The Dumb Shall Sing (Mystery of Colonial Times)

The Dumb Shall Sing (Mystery of Colonial Times)
By Stephen Lewis

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


54 new or used available from $0.01

Average customer review:

Product Description

Stephen Lewis launches a new series of historical mysteries, set in 17th century New England, featuring wealthy widow and midwife Catherine Williams aided by a defeated Pequot sachem Massaquoit, who form an unlikely crime solving team. In The Dumb Shall Sing, they discover the truth behind the sudden and violent death of a newborn.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1503403 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-08-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 272 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
....The mystery is really more one of psychological suspense than traditional investigation, with a dark, moody feel and talk of evil and pacts with the devil. I enjoyed the way in which Catherine is able to use the townspeople's superstitions against them in an unexpected manner. ... I was continually interested, and all in all this was a good read. -- The Mystery Reader, October, 1999

Catherine Williams, a 50-year-old widow, works as a midwife in 1638 New England. A tolerant woman, she hopes for understanding and respect between the Pequot Indians and the settlers, something no one else seems to want. She even saved Massaquoit, a Pequot leader, from execution and took him into her home.

When a few-days-old infant she had delivered dies, she is called to testify. Grief has struck the baby''s mother dumb, but her husband accuses Margaret, their Irish Catholic serving girl, of murder. Catherine cannot believe Margaret harmed the infant and thinks that the accusations come from religious intolerance. She has her own suspicions about the infant''s death, but no proof. With the help of the reluctant Massaquoit, Catherine comes up with a way to cut through the bigotry and discover the tragic truth behind the death of the baby.

Reminiscent of Margaret Lawrence''s 18th-century Maine mysteries,THE DUMB SHALL SING paints a marvelous picture of the harsh realities of colonial life. Catherine is a strong and wise character and Massaquoit, keeping his own council, makes for an intriguing companion. -- Romantic Times, August, 1999

I'd like to recommend The Dumb Shall Sing by Stephen Lewis - the setting,colonial America, is vividly captured by the author who has strong characters, both men and women, and a mystery to boot! -- Poisoned Pen Guest Reviews, Reader Pamela Bigelow

From the Publisher
....Lewis has a keen eye for period details, not only in the physical attributes of Newbury, but in the frequently odd behavior of its citizenry. The enthusiastic rush of Newburyites to witness the cruel pillorying of a thief in this tale reminds me of how far entertainment has come in 400 years, while a pseudo-courtroom scene, managed by a narrow-minded governor and a wickedly intolerant minister, is particularly well executed....it is the courageous, 50-something Catherine Williams and the defiantly proud Massaquoit who are the principal draws here.

From the Inside Flap
"As an avid reader of mysteries and a historian of Early America, I was delighted to encounter the midwife Mistress Catherine Williams and her Pequot ally, Massaquoit. Lewis ably captures both the atmosphere and the language of seventeenth-century New England as he involves his detectives in investigating the mysterious death of a young child. This is an absorbing(and historically accurate) read." -- Mary Beth Norton, author of Founding Mothers & Fathers, Professor of American History, Cornell University.

"17th Century flavor and a strong, independent, original character make this first book in a projected series an interesting read. Steve Lewis has done his research, and it obviously pays off." -- Robert Randisi, author of Murder is the Deal of the Day.


Customer Reviews

superb, intelligent colonial who-done-it5
In 1638 Newbury Bay in the American Colonies, the British Army massacres the Pequot Indians. The Governor drowns the few surviving captives except for their leader Massaquoit. The widow Catherine Williams, using the influence of the loan her late spouse provided the British, saves the Indian leader's life. Massaquoit objects because he wants to die with his tribesmen rather than be a slave, but has no say in his fate. The brief war leads to greater mistrust between the settlers and the natives.

Catherine learns that a baby died a few days after she helped deliver the child. The father accuses their Irish serving girl of committing murder while the mother remains in muted shock. Catherine thinks this is another case of prejudice, but needs to obtain proof that the serving girl is innocent. With the help of Massaquoit, Catherine begins her own investigation into the death of an infant.

Fans of colonial mysteries will gain much pleasure from Stephen Lewis' THE DUMB SHALL SING. The who-done-it aspects of the tale are entertaining while the novel depicts early seventeenth century Puritan life in the Massachusetts Colony. The fifty-year old Catherine is an intrepid character whose fight against prejudice of all types rings loud and true throughout the tale. The nearly silent, but extremely intelligent Massaquoit serves as a superb partner to the boisterous Catherine. The support cast adds the feel of the austerity of life in that era. Stephen Lewis provides historical mystery buffs with an arousing novel that deserves sequels.

Harriet Klausner

17th Century New England3
This is the third colonial New England book we've reviewed whose main protagonist is a midwife! Catherine Williams, a respected, wealthy widow, serves as midwife to her Connecticut Puritan settlement just at the end of the 1637 Pequot War. Although the English and their Indian allies have subdued the Pequots through a bloody massacre, Catherine manages to save one, named Massaquoit. Over time their tentative master/servant relationship develops into a kind of mutual respect as they both try to establish the innocence of an Irish Catholic servant girl who has been accused of murder. Although the plot sometimes takes odd twists unrelated to the mystery, the book provides an authentic feel for the period through its use of 17th century language, and descriptions of the settlement's superstitions, rigid class and gender hierarchy, and sometimes unsettling violence.

Lewis says he loosely based Catherine on Anne Hutchinson, a charismatic religious leader whose unorthodox views resulted in her eventual exile from the Puritan community. Hutchinson's beliefs and her stance within Puritan society, however, were much more complex than are those of Catherine, who anachronistically is so much more forward thinking and enlightened than her fellow Puritans. Massaquoit's dignity and uprightness, too, seem a bit unreal. More interesting is his reluctance to forego his Indian way of life while understanding that his survival depends on his willingness to become "English." .

This is the first of Stephen's Catherine Williams New England mysteries. It opens with an "Explanatory Note" that helps set the historic stage for the narrative that follows.

Solid first entry in an intriguing series3
First Line: The sloop Good Hope, its crowned lion figurehead pointing to the sea, rode the outgoing tide past the mouth of Newbury Bay toward deeper waters whose color changed from light blue near shore to an almost midnight black.

We first see wealthy widow Catherine Williams on board the Good Hope. It's New England in 1638. The Pequot War has ended, and all the Pequot leaders are ready for "justice" on deck. Since the agreement the Puritan leaders of Newbury made was with Catherine's deceased husband, they think they can conveniently forget about it. Catherine deems otherwise and manages to save the life of one of the leaders, Massaquoit, who will now live with her.

Catherine is a well-respected midwife and healer in the community. When a healthy baby she recently delivered dies, she is called upon to testify. The baby's mother is struck dumb with grief, and the father accuses both Catherine and his Irish Catholic maid of having had part in the infant's demise. Catherine believes the maid to be innocent, "guilty" only of being Catholic, and she begins to work to find the real reason for the baby's death.

Lewis uses setting and characterization to good effect in this first book in the series. Seventeenth- century New England comes to life, and Catherine and Massaquoit make a good team of investigators. The only weakness I found in the book was that it was glaringly obvious to me what had happened to the baby. That one flaw aside, I found The Dumb Shall Sing to be a strong start to the series, which to date only contains three books. I'll be looking for the other two, The Blind in Darkness and The Sea Hath Spoken. Strong female characters in this time period should not be passed by!